Five Ways to Get the Job When You’re ‘Overqualified’

Build the case on how much you want to work for REI, or how long you’ve admired Whole Foods Market. Be clear that if you join the company, you will have reached a key goal for yourself – and are unlikely to leave. Or talk about your hope to grow and develop a career within the company – again with an idea that you will contribute for many years.

Sometime yet this year, you or someone you know is likely to be told they are overqualified for a job. The speaker may be a recruiter or a friend, a decision-maker or a drainer of hopefulness. And when they say or hint at the overqualified label, they may mean something about your talents, or about their budget for the job, or about the age of the applicant, or how secure the hiring manager is in his job.

When Vickie Elmer wrote about the “overqualified epidemic” recently for the Washington Post Capital Business, it became clear to her that someone who’s 23 and been tending bar for a year and someone who’s 53 and been out of work for a year both could be called overqualified.

With an unemployment rate at 8.3 percent in July and 12.8 million people jobless, many people will apply for jobs they could have handled five years ago – or would have ignored early in their search. So how do they turn the tide so “overqualified” does not mean out of the running? Here are five suggestions from Elmer featured on Glassdoor.com.

Cost reduction has been the main driver of IIoT adoption. Other contributors are the emergence of ancillary and complementary technologies, including low-power hardware devices, the cloud, Big Data analytics, robotics and automation and smart sensors. ... More >>

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